You need to sign in or sign up before continuing.
Take a photo of a barcode or cover
A review by lindsaynixon
Don't Let Go by Harlan Coben
4.0
4.5 stars // I'm still catching my breath... Life will be on hold until you finish this thriller! Coben fans, don't miss this one!
I stayed in a perpetual state of 😱 and had no clue how it would wrap up, which is rare for me.
The audible deserves a nomination for that performance!
Nap is a police officer who never accepts his brothers suicide and starts poking around when new evidence appears 15 years later... this leads him through a tangled web of "conspiracy theory" government coverups and little lies among friends that become corrosive.
The underlying theme is how we only see what we to see, and hear what we want to hear, biased on our own narrative and what we need the truth to be in order to cope. we fit the facts...
This book also cracks open the illusion that anything happens in a vacuum. Wrong place, wrong time is happening in every moment... in ways you aren't considering: Every fact is bumping up and tangling with another fact, that only becomes relevant later because someone once designated it as important and relating when it was actually coincidental and unimportant.
Fascinating story on how misunderstanding and presumptions (and ego) alter perception.
This might not be a good book to start with, if you're considering a relationship with Coben... but if you've been reading Coben for a while now, do not miss this!
I stayed in a perpetual state of 😱 and had no clue how it would wrap up, which is rare for me.
The audible deserves a nomination for that performance!
Nap is a police officer who never accepts his brothers suicide and starts poking around when new evidence appears 15 years later... this leads him through a tangled web of "conspiracy theory" government coverups and little lies among friends that become corrosive.
The underlying theme is how we only see what we to see, and hear what we want to hear, biased on our own narrative and what we need the truth to be in order to cope. we fit the facts...
This book also cracks open the illusion that anything happens in a vacuum. Wrong place, wrong time is happening in every moment... in ways you aren't considering: Every fact is bumping up and tangling with another fact, that only becomes relevant later because someone once designated it as important and relating when it was actually coincidental and unimportant.
Fascinating story on how misunderstanding and presumptions (and ego) alter perception.
This might not be a good book to start with, if you're considering a relationship with Coben... but if you've been reading Coben for a while now, do not miss this!